MSI 990FXA-GD80 In The Box

For a 990FX board, MSI has put thought and effort into what we get in the box here.  For $195, it is good to see this much in the box!  As the USB 3.0 port is at a right angle, the USB 3.0 bracket supplied has the option of going to the back of the case or in the front by removing the bracket.  In terms of what we get:

IO Shield
Driver CD
User Guides
Three flexible SLI connectors
Six SATA cables (locking, right angled)
Two Molex to SATA power cables
USB 3.0 bracket

Image courtesy of Newegg

Board Features

MSI 990FXA-GD80
Price Link to Newegg
Size ATX
CPU Interface AM3+
CPU Support AMD FX/Phenom II/Athlon II/Sempron
Chipset AMD 990FX
Base Clock Frequency 200.02 MHz
Core Voltage Auto, Range Dependant on CPU
CPU Clock Multiplier Auto, 4x to 32.5x
DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.199 V to 2.460 V
DRAM Command Rate Auto, 1T or 2T
Memory Slots Four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting up to 32 GB
Up to Dual Channel
Support for DDR3, 800-2133 MHz,
Expansion Slots 3 x PCIe Gen2 x16 (x16/x16 or x16/x8/x8)
2 x PCIe Gen2 x4
2 x PCIe Gen2 x1
1 x PCI
Onboard SATA/RAID 6 x SATA 6 Gbps, Support for RAID 0, 1, 5, 10
Onboard 6 x SATA 6 Gbps (SB950)
5 x Fan Headers
1 x Front Panel Header
1 x S/PDIF Output Header
2 x USB 2.0 Headers
1 x USB 3.0 Headers
1 x IEEE1394 Header
1 x Serial Port Header
1 x Clear CMOS Header
Power/Reset Buttons
1 x OC Genie Button
1 x TPM Module Header
Onboard LAN Realtek 8111E
Onboard Audio Realtek ALC892
Power Connectors 1 x 24-pin ATX connector
1 x 8-pin 12V connector
Fan Headers 1 x CPU Fan Header
4 x SYS Fan Headers
IO Panel 2 x Keyboard/Mouse PS2 Port
1 x Optical SPDIF Output
1 x Coaxial SPDIF Output
1 x Gigabit Ethernet
2 x USB 3.0
4 x USB 2.0
2 x eSATA / USB 2.0 Combo Ports
1 x Clear CMOS Button
Audio Outputs
BIOS Version B80
Warranty Period 3 Years

Amazingly the MSI board is the only one which hits the 200 MHz base frequency spot on.  The other boards hover at 200.7 MHz (or 201.3 MHz) due to the way the frequency is determined.  As a result, you would expect the performance to be a little worse on the MSI, unfortunately.  For features, there is not anything out of the ordinary here compared to the other 990FX products apart from the odd fan header arrangement.  We also have another Realtek NIC/Audio combination, as well as a three year warranty.

Software

Rather than attempt an all-in-one solution for their software, MSI are using the ‘bombard’ approach, as the majority of their software features come under different installations and names.  The major one is Control Center:

Control Center is the face of overclocking, voltages and the limited fan controls.  With this software you can apply OC Genie, unlock cores in your processor, or turn the LEDs on the motherboard off if they bother you.

Another important element in the MSI arsenal is Live Update 5, a piece of software I rather like.  Live Update 5 will analyze your system in terms of BIOS, drivers and utilities and double check with the MSI servers if you have the latest versions.  If you do not, then the system will ask if you want to download the necessary files.  While it sounds like a good system, there is one major drawback – it does not tell you how big the files are!  It also likes to download whole packages, and waiting for a 130 MB audio driver update does not sound like fun.  However, it is useful for BIOS updates.

Also available from MSI is Network Genie, an application designed to prioritize certain types of network traffic over others, and Teaming Genie, which combines network ports into single transmissions (however users will need to add network cards to use this functionality).

MSI 990FXA-GD80 – BIOS and Overclocking Biostar TA990FXE – Overview and Visual Inspection
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  • mmstick - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    The primary problem with AMD FX is that in order to use the full power of the FPU the program needs to be compiled with FMA4 support, else it is only using half of the FPUs, thus making it a quad core. Secondly, many Windows-based programs are compiled with the Intel C+ compiler, so although the FX may support AVX and many other instructions, the compiled program sees it as a non-Intel CPU so it disables those instruction sets, allowing Intel CPUs to be optimized, and AMD CPUs to remain deoptimized. This is what happens when you are up against someone with the most market share, whom has the ability to dictate what instruction sets they want programmers to use. As well, when people say they are going to buy Intel CPUs instead because they claim AMD didn't make a good processor, why do you think they can't be on top of performance? Without R&D budget there isn't much that can be done, and when you face someone who practically owns a monopoly, that makes it even moreso harder to compete.
  • Omoronovo - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    The IC++ compiler has not done that since 2010 when they were forced to settle their antitrust dispute with AMD.
  • DigitalFreak - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    " This is what happens when you are up against someone with the most market share, whom has the ability to dictate what instruction sets they want programmers to use. As well, when people say they are going to buy Intel CPUs instead because they claim AMD didn't make a good processor, why do you think they can't be on top of performance? Without R&D budget there isn't much that can be done, and when you face someone who practically owns a monopoly, that makes it even moreso harder to compete."

    Waaaaah. It's always someone else's fault.
  • anubis44 - Friday, November 9, 2012 - link

    "Waaaaah. It's always someone else's fault."

    Well, sometimes it really IS someone else's fault. If the mafia had it in for you, and cut your brake cables and burnt your house down when you weren't looking, you'd say it's 'someone else's fault' too. Intel's blackmail and threats to suppliers who used AMD processors kinda screwed AMD over just a tad.

    That said, I think now that Jim Keller is back at AMD and head of AMD's CPU division, it won't be too long before AMD is seriously back in the game.
  • Monkeysweat - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I saw them on some of the benchmarks, why didn't you post them along side the AMD benchies for gaming?

    If we are looking at a roundup of the best of what AMD and it's partners have to offer, I'd like to see what the competing team brings to the table,, just leave em stock and even let the AMD ones get overclocked.

    I wouldn't even worry about cherry picking the Intel combos,, just something random.
  • Beenthere - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    AMD has not abandoned the highend CPU market. Their focus may be broadening but that does not mean they will discontinue discrete highend desktop CPUs for at least several years. Eventually everyone except a small group will use APUs as they will deliver the best performance/value proposition. Only extremists will bother with a discrete CPU/GPU with higher power consumption, increased heat and little practical benefit for mainstream users.
  • Articuno - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    It's a pretty nice chipset and the lower tier boards are quite cost-effective. Just wish Bulldozer was competitive with Intel, let alone their last gen chips.
  • Mathieu Bourgie - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Thank you for this article Ian.

    Are there any chance that we'll see a review of the newer FX-6200 CPU or at least have data for it in the CPU bench? Considering that it's 500MHz faster than the model that it's replacing and no major site (or any that I can see) did a review of it, it'd be interesting to see how it performs.

    I'm curious to see if it's a valid alternative, in any way, for $170, vs the Intel Core i5-2300 ($180).

    I don't expect any miracle for gaming performance, but for workstation workloads (Photoshop, video editing and the like), who knows?

    Thanks,
    Mathieu
  • cosminmcm - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    There is a review at pcper, a good one. The processor is pretty weak, nothing exciting there. Thuban walks all over it.
  • Mathieu Bourgie - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Thanks, I didn't see that.

    Quite disappointing indeed.

    Here's about that Piledriver or Trinity are more competitive.

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